A good operator knows their tools and has an idea of how the tool is accomplishing its objectives on their behalf. This blog post surveys Beacons commands and provides background on which commands inject into remote processes, which commands spawn jobs, and which commands rely on cmd.exe or powershell.exe.

API-only

These commands are built-into Beacon and rely on Win32 APIs to meet their objectives.

cd
cp
download
drives
exit
getprivs
getuid
kerberos_ccache_use
kerberos_ticket_purge
kerberos_ticket_use
jobkill
kill
link
ls
make_token
mkdir
mv
ppid
ps
pwd
reg query
reg queryv
rev2self
rm
rportfwd
setenv
socks
steal_token
timestomp
unlink
upload

House-keeping Commands

The following commands are built into Beacon and exist to configure Beacon or perform house-keeping actions. Some of these commands (e.g., clear, downloads, help, mode, note) do not generate a task for Beacon to execute.

cancel
checkin
clear
downloads
help
jobs
mode dns
mode dns-txt
mode dns6
mode http
note
powershell-import
sleep
socks stop
spawnto

Post-Exploitation Jobs (Process Execution + Remote Process Injection)

Many Beacon post-exploitation features spawn a process and inject a capability into that process. Beacon does this for a number of reasons: (i) this protects the agent if the capability crashes, (ii) this scheme makes it seamless for an x86 Beacon to launch x64 post-exploitation tasks. The following commands run as post-exploitation jobs:

browserpivot
bypassuac
covertvpn
dcsync
desktop
elevate
execute-assembly
hashdump
keylogger
logonpasswords
mimikatz
net
portscan
powerpick
psinject
pth
runasadmin
screenshot
shspawn
spawn
ssh
ssh-key
wdigest

OPSEC Advice: Use the spawnto command to change the process Beacon will launch for its post-exploitation jobs. The default is rundll32.exe (you probably don’t want that). The ppid command will change the parent process these jobs are run under as well.

Process Execution

These commands spawn a new process:

execute
runas
runu

OPSEC Advice: The ppid command will change the parent process of commands run by execute. The ppid command does not affect runas or spawnu.

Process Execution: Cmd.exe

The shell command depends on cmd.exe.

The pth and getsystem commands get honorable mention here. These commands rely on cmd.exe to pass a token to Beacon via a named pipe. The command pattern to pass this token is an indicator some host-based security products look for.

OPSEC Advice: the shell command uses the COMSPEC environment variable to find the preferred command-line interpreter on Windows. Use Aggressor Script’s &bsetenv function to point COMSPEC to a different cmd.exe location, if needed. Use the ppid command to change the parent process the command-line interpreter is run under. To pth without cmd.exe, execute the pth steps by hand. Don’t use getsystem. There are other ways to acquire a SYSTEM token.

Process Execution: PowerShell.exe

The following commands launch powershell.exe to perform some task on your behalf.

elevate uac-token-duplication
powershell
spawnas
spawnu
winrm
wmi

OPSEC Advice: Use the ppid command to change the parent process powershell.exe is run under. Be aware, there are alternatives to each of these commands that do not use powershell.exe:

Remote Process Injection

The post-exploitation job commands (previously mentioned) rely on process injection too. The other commands that inject into a remote process are:

dllinject
dllload
inject
shinject

Service Creation

The following internal Beacon commands create a service (either on the current host or a remote target) to run a command. These commands use Win32 APIs to create and manipulate services.

getsystem
psexec
psexec_psh

源链接

Hacking more

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